Extrusion Width Testing of 3D Printed Specimens

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I want to share a little experiment I did and see if I can tap the wisdom of the crowd here to better understand the results. I ran mechanical tests on 3D printed specimens with various extrusion widths to determine the effect that it would have on printed part strength. The results were normalized to compensate for the higher strength of heavier parts and enable fair comparison of all specimens tested. This was done by dividing the measured ultimate strength over the mass of the part. The result is the featured graph. I truly expected the graph to have a more predictable pattern than it did. My current assumption is that the Slic3r program's extrusion width function is more complicated than I thought. My conclusion and recommendation for the time being is that leaving the extrusion width at the default setting will maximize part strength. The attached pdf file explains the testing procedure and results in more detail. Let me know what your personal experiences with varying extrusion width have been!

About the author:
MechEngineerMike
Hi I'm Michael, I'm a hands-on mechanical engineer, technical writer, designer, tinkerer, husband, dog owner, and creator of Thingiverse's #1 group, "Engineering". I love discovering useful 3D designs and I share all my work for FREE! If you've enjoyed one of my models then please let me know and check out my blog where I share personal tips and free design resources!

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